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Darwin Area Trip Report 26-30th Dec 2010

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Subject: Darwin Area Trip Report 26-30th Dec 2010
From: Mark Stanley <>
Date: Sat, 1 Jan 2011 11:27:56 +0800
I've just returned from a very pleasant birding trip to the Top End.
The weather was fantastic - mostly cloudy, with refreshing breezes,
the odd cooling shower, virtually no flies, few and not very troubling
mossies. All in all I saw 154 species, 52 new for the year,12 lifers
and an Aussie tick (Little Ringed Plover) making for a top notch trip.
Accommodation was cheap on the Esplanade; I rented a Rav 4 equivalent
for $320 for 5 days +mileage. It was easy to access frequent flyer
flights so this made for a very economical break. I would highly
recommend a visit in the wet.  I'll need to return in the dry season
especially for the Rufous Owl (last note in the Botanic Gardens Owl
book was 24-Nov) and other night birds which I suspect might be easier
to see in the dry season.

Among the places I visited were:

Darwin Botanic Gardens:
- no owls but did see a Bar-breasted Honeyeater along with Dusky, the
ubiquitous White-gaped, Brown and Rufous Banded Honeyeaters, a nesting
Northern Fantail and Lemon-bellied Flycatcher.

East Point Reserve:
Great views of Rainbow Pittas; also Shining and Lemon-bellied
Flycatchers, Grey Whistler, Emerald Dove in the monsoon woodland;
Red-headed Honeyeater, Black Butcherbird & and Broad-billed Flycatcher
in the mangroves;
Bush Stone-curlew, Silver-crowned Friarbird, Crimson, Double-barred
and Long-tailed Finches in the clearings;
And a good range of waders on the high tide roost at the point.

Buffalo Creek:
Gulls, terns, waders, herons + Koel, Drongo, Green-backed Gerygone,
Friarbirds but no Chestnut Rail.

Mangroves off Tiger Brennan Drive:
There is a path into the mangroves to access some power poles a few
hundred m south of Stoddart Drive. Chestnut Rails - 2 or 3 were seen
together in the middle of a downpour. I watched the rails from about
20 m as they cackled and probed around a little stream formed by the
rainwater runoff diverted around the mound on which the poles were
built. Mangrove Robins, Collared Kingfisher, Yellow White-eyes and
Red-headed Honeyeaters were also there.

Charles Darwin NP:
Northern Rosellas, Little Shrikethrush (in the mangroves), heard
Chestnut Rails there also but did not pursue them. Also heard but did
not see Pale-vented Bush-hen in long grass formed by a stream entering
the mangroves below the carpark.

Leanyer STP
A kind and friendly local :- ) offered to take me to Leanyer STP if I
promised not to get out of the car, go swimming in the ponds or be
eaten by a crocodile. Constrained by these unreasonable conditions, I
did get to see 3 Little Ringed Plovers, one clearly a juvenile, one an
adult and one possibly in between. Lots of Common Sandpipers, a few
Hardheads and Australasian Grebes and many Pied Herons, WW Terns,
Wandering Whistling Ducks, Rajah Shelducks and even a couple of Green
Pygmy Geese.

Homes Jungle:
Good for Brown Quail, lots of Forest Kingfishers as well as Sacred and
Blue-winged Kookaburra, a solitary Black Bittern in the "jungle",
numerous Golden-headed but no Zitting Cisticolas, Leaden Flycatchers,
Finches, Chestnut-breasted Mannikins and Pheasant Coucals.

Howard Springs:
Nankeen Night Heron, Azure Kingfisher and a probable Little Kingfisher
zipped passed before I could bin it. Excellent views of a very
approachable Rainbow Pitta. Also Little Shrikethush, Shining and
Leaden Flycatcher, Rose-crowned Fruit-Dove.

Fogg Dam:
Barking Owl, 8 Barn Owls on the road out, numerous Jacanas, and
excellent viewing of the three white egret species from the viewing
platform. This also provided excellent views of White-browed Crakes on
all three evening I visited it. They seemed to start calling about an
hour before sunset and then come out shortly after that to preen,
bathe, walk around and generally get themselves observed. There must
be 3 or 4 parties/family groups that can be heard/seen from the
platform.
On the road from Stuart Highway I saw a Peregrine, Black-shouldered
Kite, Kestrel and Red-tailed Black-Cockatoos

Pine Creek:
Highlight of the trip would have to be turning off the main road for
Pine Creek and the first bird I saw was a female Hooded Parrot on the
powerlines. Jumping out of the car I was confronted with Varied
Lorikeet infested flowering gums. While trying to get a clear view of
the lorikeets, Banded Honeyeaters kept getting in the way. So 3 of the
first 4 species I saw there were lifers!  Masked Finches added to the
previous finch species and Brush Cuckoo, Rufous-throated Honeyeater at
the cemetary..

Thanks to those who responded to my RFI. Apologies to those I did not
manage to catch up with.  Thanks to Tim Bawden who leant me his
annotated version of McCrie and Watson's excellent Finding Birds in
Darwin, Kakadu and the Top End. And a special mention to Denise for
taking time out from her may other commitments to show me around
Leanyer STP and preventing from being eaten by a croc.

Annotated Trip List:

Australasian Grebe             STP's at Leanyer, Palmerston & Pine Creek
Australian Pelican               Buffalo Creek
Little Black Cormorant        Copperfield Dam, Pine Creek
Great Cormorant                Knuckley Lagoon
Little Pied Cormorant          Pine Creek STP
Australian Darter                Most wetlands
Great Egret                        Fogg Dam
Pied Heron                        Most wetlands
Intermediate Egret             Most wetlands
White-faced Heron             Pine Creek STP
Little Egret                        Coast and wetlands
Eastern Reef-egret             East Point
Cattle Egret                       Near Fogg Dam
Green-backed Heron          Most coastal sites
Rufous Night-Heron            Howard Springs
Black Bittern                     Homes Jungle
Black-necked Stork           Various wetlands
Australian White Ibis          Very common
Straw-necked Ibis              Fogg Dam only
Royal Spoonbill                 Widespread
Magpie Goose                   Widespread
Wandering Whistling-duc   Widespread; all STPs
Radjah Shelduck               Widespread
Green Pygmy-goose          Widespread
Hardhead                          Leanyer STP
Osprey                             East Point
Black-shouldered Kite        Near Fogg Dam
Black Kite                        Not very common
Whistling Kite                   Very common
Brahminy Kite                  Over mangroves
White-bellied Fish-Eagle   One over Darwin
Australian Goshawk         One on trip to Pine Creek
Collared Sparrowhawk      One near Copperfield Dam
Wedge-tailed Eagle          3 occassions
Australian Kestrel             Near Fogg Dam
Peregrine Falcon              Near Fogg Dam
Orange-footed Scrubfow    Very common esp Botanic Gardens and East Point
Brown Quail                     Homes Jungle
Brolga                             South of Adealide River
White-browed Crake         Fogg Dam
Chestnut Rail                   Darwin mangroves
Pale-vented Bush-hen       Heard at Charles Darwin NP in long grass
formed by a stream entering the mangroves below the carpark.
Purple Swamphen            One at Pine Creek STP
Comb-crested Jacana       Abundant at Fogg Dam
Australian Pied Oystercatcher  East Point & Buffalo Creek
Bush Thick-knee              Many places
Masked Lapwing              Abundant; many nesting at Leanyer STP
Pacific Golden-Plover        East Point & Buffalo Creek
Grey Plover                      East Point & Buffalo Creek
Little Ringed Plover           3 at Leanyer STP
Red-capped Plover           Various coastal sites
Lesser Sand Plover          East Point
Greater Sand Plover         East Point
Black-fronted Dotterel       Pine Creek STP
Bar-tailed Godwit             East Point & Buffalo Creek
Whimbrel                         East Point and elsewhere
Far Eastern Curlew           East Point
Marsh Sandpiper              Fogg dam
Common Greenshank       Knuckley Lagoon
Terek sandpiper                East Point
Common Sandpiper          East Point & STPs
Grey-tailed Tattler             East Point
Ruddy Turnstone              East Point & Buffalo Creek
Great Knot                       East Point & Buffalo Creek
Sanderling                       Buffalo Creek
Red-necked Stint              East Point
Sharp-tailed Sandpiper      Pine Creek STP
Silver Gull                        Not very common
Caspian Tern                    Buffalo Creek
Great Crested Tern           Buffalo Creek (Lesser Crested probably
present but not followed up)
White-winged Tern            Fogg Dam and STP's
Emerald Dove                   East Point
Crested Pigeon                Pine Creek township
Peaceful Dove                  Very common
Bar-shouldered Dove         Abundant everywhere
Rose-crowned Fruit-Dove   East Point & Fogg Dam
Torresian Imperial-Pigeon   Abundant around Darwin
Red-tailed Black-Cockatoo Flock near Fogg Dam
Galah                               Widespread
Little Corella                     Abundant
Sulphur-crested Cockatoo  Common around Darwin
Red-collared Lorikeet         Very common. (Is this splitable from
Rainbow Lorikeet? Sounds and looks different.)
Varied Lorikeet                  Very common around Pine creek
Northern Rosella                Common at Pine Creek, less so around
Darwin, Charles Darwin NP
Hooded Parrot                   20+ on road into Pine Creek
Red-winged Parrot             Common
Brush Cuckoo                   Heard many places, seen well at Pine Creek
Common Koel                   Heard many places, seen at Buffalo Creek
Pheasant Coucal               Common at Homes Jungle, and near Fogg Dam
Pallid Cuckoo                    Heard Howard Sporings, seen Fogg dam
Barn Owl                          Many along Anzac Rd to Fogg dam
Barking Owl                      Heard from Fogg Dam viewing platform,
seen on Dam wall
Blue-winged Kookaburra     Common
Forest Kingfisher               Very Common
Collared Kingfisher            Seen/heard at most mangroves
Sacred Kingfisher              About 10% of Forest Kingfishers
Azure Kingfisher                Pine Creek & Howard Springs
Little Kingfisher                 Glimpse at Howard Springs
Rainbow Bee-eater            Very common
Dollarbird                          Very Common
Rainbow Pitta                    Very common at East Point; also
Adealide River and Howard Springs
Australian Bushlark            Many grasslands eg Homes Jungle
Black-faced Cuckooshrike   Only around Pine Creek
White-bellied Cuckooshrike Very common, including at Pine Creek
Varied Triller                       Very common including in mangroves
Northern Fantail                  Reasonably common around Darwin
Willie Wagtail                     Widespread but not very common
Leaden Flycatcher              Widespread and common
Broad-billed Flycatcher        East Point mangroves
Shining Flycatcher              Widespread
Restless Flycatcher            Widespread
Golden-headed Cisticola      Very common in rank grass; no Zitting
Cisticolas seen.
Grey-crowned Babbler         Widespread
Grey Whistler                     Common especially East Point
Rufous Whistler                  Away from Darwin
Little Shrike-thrush              Mangroves and forest near Darwin
Grey Shrike-thrush              Sporadic
Mangrove Robin                  Seen at mangroves near Darwin
Lemon-bellied Flyrobin         Widespread and common
Jacky-winter                        Pine Creek area
Red-backed Fairy-wren        Widespread
Weebill                               Only at Pine Creek; much more
yellow than southern birds.
Large-billed Gerygone           Palmerston STP
Green-backed Gerygone       Buffalo Creek and STPs
Mistletoebird                       Darwin BG
Striated Pardalote                Pine Creek
Australian Yellow White-eye Most mangroves
White-gaped Honeyeater      Very common
Yellow-throated Miner           Palmerston
Bar-breasted Honeyeater      One at Botanic Gardens
Rufous-banded Honeyeater   Very common
Rufous-throated Honeyeater  Pair at Pine Creek cemetary
Dusky Myzomela                 Botanic Gardens
Red-headed Myzomela         Botanic Gardens & mangroves near Darwin
Banded Honeyeater              Commonest honeyeater in Pine Creek
Brown Honeyeater                Abundant
White-throated Honeyeater    Pairs at many locations
Blue-faced honeyeater          Especially common around Palmerston
Helmeted Friarbird                Reasonably common
Silver-crowned Friarbird         Very common around Darwin
Little Friarbird                       Positive ID at pine Creek but
suspected elsewhere
Australasian Figbird              Very common around Darwin
Green Oriole                        Virtually all wooded locations
Spangled Drongo                  Buffalo Creek and Howard Springs
Magpielark                           Ubiquitous
White-breasted Woodswallow Very widespread
Black-faced Woodswallow     Common away from Darwin, eg Fogg Dam, Pine Creek
Black Butcherbird                 Charles Darwin NP & East Point mangroves
Pied Butcherbird                   Widespread
Great Bowerbird                    Widespread
Torresian Crow                      Widespread
Crimson Finch                      Commonest finch
Double-barred Finch              Common, often with Crimson Finches
Masked Finch                       Homes Jungle, Adelaide River and Pine Creek
Long-tailed Finch                   Reasonably common
Chestnut-breasted Mannikin   Common, often with Crimson Finches


-- 
Mark Stanley
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